She has somewhat curly dark hair (guessing it's brown), her left eye is blue while the right is green. (Cashore didn't give much of a description about how she looks...)
Katsa is probably 18, because if you look at page 15, she says, "He was younger than she'd thought, not much older than she, nineteen or twenty at most." ~ She's eighteen.
There are very few books that have no metaphors or similes. Good writers always paint a picture with words: a metaphor compares two unlike things, and in Graceling, we see that Lady Katsa is referred to as a "murderous dog" for example-- she is of course a person, not a dog; but she is compared to one. If you look through the book, you will also find places where the author (Kristin Cashore) uses similes-- these compare two unlike things, but they use the words "like" or "as" to make the comparison-- for example, Helda is carrying a dress that is "bright as the tomatoes that clustered on the vine..." Obviously, a dress is not the same thing as a tomato, but the author wants to give you the image of how it is a bright red color.
They look like whirligigs.
Look in a book
The word that starts like book and rhymes with pounce is "look."
its big and red
aa
a
look in your Biology book
chuby
No. If you have read the book, you'll know that Carlisle does not look like Dracula.
well... there is no "look" for her... it's what you want her to look like by the way you take in the description